- Signatures: 2,993
- Goal: 10,000
- Deadline: Ongoing...
Exported worldwide, these toxic films are spreading tobacco addiction, disease and death to the largest generation in history. If current trends continue, tobacco will kill 450 million people around the world by 2050.
The single simplest, most effective anti-tobacco action you can take?
Young people, parents, community leaders and health professionals know that major U.S. studios could keep smoking out of future youth-rated movies (G, PG, PG-13) using their own voluntary rating system - no government intervention required. This policy solution is endorsed by the World Health Organization and leading U.S. health organizations.
So far, the film industry's trade association - the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) - has point-blank refused. Join thousands of people worldwide in signing this global petition. Tell Hollywood: The whole world is watching.
| Number | Date | Prefix | Name | Country | Why I'm signing |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2,997 | 1:40 pm PST, Nov 8 | Ms. | Rose Anne Navalta | United States | I'm signing this to let my voice be heard and to help stop the tobacco industries in promoting their products. By promoting it into movies, it will encourage the youth to smoke and think its okay. BUT ITS NOT. So therefore, we must put an end to this. |
| 2,996 | 1:29 pm PST, Nov 2 | Kathleen Koga | United States | because the health of our youth matters and they are influenced by smoking in movies. | |
| 2,995 | 3:36 pm PDT, Oct 26 | Nicole Sutton | United States | Because we need to protect our young people from the influence of BIG TOBACCO companies. | |
| 2,994 | 9:07 pm PDT, Oct 19 | Elena Manchette | United States | ||
| 2,993 | 8:23 am PDT, Oct 12 | Ms. | Mary Petiprin | United States | We must limit the instances of exposure to tobacco that the youth are seeing! |
| 2,992 | 4:11 pm PDT, Sep 3 | Mr. | mark porter | United States | Too many people die from smoking every year from cancers related smoking. My grandmother was one of them.If this only impacts one person not to start smoking than it has acchieved a very great thing. |
| 2,991 | 7:09 pm PDT, Aug 26 | Mr. | Gary Gustafson | United States | I have never smoked in my life but I have friends who are always trying to give up smoking unsuccessfully. According to what I have heard, half of life time users will die from the product. Save our youth before they become the next generation to be slaughtered. |
| 2,990 | 4:03 pm PDT, Aug 19 | Tania Taylor | United States | The greed has to end! Knowledge and the power of a good example-not smoking, especially in what our children watch, are effective tools in the war on smoking. The detrimental effects of second hand smoke must also be stressed. The rights of non-smokers should come first and especially those of our innocent children. | |
| 2,989 | 12:49 pm PDT, Aug 14 | Mrs. | Melody Stewart | Canada | I work in health promotion and prevention is very important. Smoking in movies attracts children to try smoking, and that needs to end. |
| 2,988 | 7:49 am PDT, Aug 13 | Ms. | Simone Figeroux | Trinidad And Tobago | Because who wants to smoke can do it. But second hand smoke is much worse... |
| 2,987 | 9:15 am PDT, Aug 12 | Ms. | Marie McDonough | United States | Anything I can do to stop young people from smoking, I will do. My mother, father and father-in-law all died horrible deaths from cigarette smoking. This needs to stop. |
| 2,986 | 7:57 am PDT, Aug 6 | Mr. | Keith Fry | United States | Tobacco companies aggressively target children as "replacement smokers." They have used movies and TV for decades to hook children on their deadly, addictive products. The motion picture and television industries are Big Tobacco's willing handmaidens in creating generations of nicotine addicts. Tobacco is the leading cause of preventable death and disease in the developed world. The motion picture and television industries are helping to keep it that way. |
| 2,985 | 2:16 pm PDT, Aug 4 | Anonymous | United Kingdom | I agree that smoking shouldn't be advertised to minors. As long as that's where this censorship ends. | |
| 2,984 | 1:53 pm PDT, Aug 4 | Mrs. | Alison Dennehy | Australia | I grew up surrounded by smoke, the stench of it was everywhere. Thanks to my parents, relatives and the general public, my respiratory infections were ongoing throughout my childhood and my elder brother had severe asthma. We have come so far from the addicts calling all the shots, but we must go further. When it is recognised that smokers are drug addicts, perhaps they will finally stop trying to inflict their addiction on the majority and seek the help they need. |
| 2,983 | 3:58 pm PDT, Aug 1 | Anonymous | United States | ||
| 2,982 | 8:10 am PDT, Jul 29 | Lesley McEvoy | United Kingdom | To stop kids health being sacrificed for profit | |
| 2,981 | 1:05 am PDT, Jul 25 | Khaila Edward | United States | It's so simple, why not just do it. Smoking kills. | |
| 2,980 | 8:07 pm PDT, Jul 20 | Mr. | Carl Rosenstock | United States | |
| 2,979 | 10:25 am PDT, Jul 20 | Mark Bowersox | United States | To do my part in a smoke free world! | |
| 2,978 | 8:07 am PDT, Jul 15 | Erin Keck | United States | I support you guys! | |
| 2,977 | 8:06 am PDT, Jul 15 | Karen Keck | United States | Have children and don't want to support smoking. | |
| 2,976 | 8:04 am PDT, Jul 15 | Noelia Minaya | United States | Trying to quit, I have a nine year old sister. | |
| 2,975 | 8:03 am PDT, Jul 15 | Alex Stewart | United States | Don't Smoke | |
| 2,974 | 8:02 am PDT, Jul 15 | April Robbins | United States | no need to promote! | |
| 2,973 | 8:01 am PDT, Jul 15 | Robyn Jolly | United States | Smoking is bad | |
| 2,972 | 7:58 am PDT, Jul 15 | Elizabeth Amezcua | United States | Smoking stinks! | |
| 2,971 | 7:48 am PDT, Jul 15 | Rebecca Bowersox | United States | My Children | |
| 2,970 | 7:46 am PDT, Jul 15 | Nichole Bennet | United States | Stop Smoking :) | |
| 2,969 | 7:45 am PDT, Jul 15 | Sadilia Evertsc | United States | Support the cause | |
| 2,968 | 7:43 am PDT, Jul 15 | Jada Davila | United States | My children | |
| 2,967 | 7:40 am PDT, Jul 15 | Robert Knobel | United States | Ex Member | |
| 2,966 | 7:38 am PDT, Jul 15 | Ms. | Susan Wook | United States | Dad died of lung cancer, I hate smoking. |
| 2,965 | 7:35 am PDT, Jul 15 | Ms. | Samantha Teicelbaom | United States | Against Teen Smoking |
| 2,964 | 7:31 am PDT, Jul 15 | Ms. | Jocelyn Davis | United States | Against smoking. |
| 2,963 | 7:26 am PDT, Jul 15 | Ms. | Mairi Cardone | United States | I'm part of the group Reality Check. |
| 2,962 | 2:57 am PDT, Jul 15 | Mrs. | Pippa Lloyd | United Kingdom | To protect children and young people from taking up smoking and stop more preventable deaths |
| 2,961 | 6:13 am PDT, Jul 5 | Anonymous | United States | To protect our children and our environment | |
| 2,960 | 5:58 pm PDT, Jun 25 | Ted Schiele | United States | Reality Check (Tompkins Co, NY). My brand, your brand. My cool, you're cool. Learn your tobacco brands as a kid and you're addicted for life! This generation knows tobacco's dirty tricks. Get smoke and spit out of kids' movies, NOW! | |
| 2,959 | 7:10 pm PDT, Jun 22 | andrew grant | United States | ||
| 2,958 | 8:51 am PDT, Jun 22 | Talia Miller | United States | Because I know lots of teens who are dedicated to this cause and we know that movies DO influence teens to smoke. | |
| 2,957 | 5:18 am PDT, Jun 19 | Benjamin Flanders | United States | I'm signing because smoking is a disgusting, debilitating, and destructive habit and no good comes from trying to get kids hooked, other than lining the pockets of Big Tobacco. | |
| 2,956 | 5:15 am PDT, Jun 19 | Mr. | Kenneth Winfield | United States | Because I hate smoking and cigarettes. |
| 2,955 | 8:07 pm PDT, Jun 17 | Ms. | Anonymous | Malaysia | |
| 2,954 | 4:09 am PDT, Jun 16 | Erin B | United States | It is Reality... | |
| 2,953 | 7:08 pm PDT, Jun 15 | David Chen | United States | ||
| 2,952 | 5:48 pm PDT, Jun 15 | Ms. | hannah brown | United States | Smoking is bad for others |
| 2,951 | 5:12 pm PDT, Jun 15 | Kendall Miller | United States | Smoking is a horrible thing and what's even worse is that they portray it to audiences that are extremely influenced by the movie. |
Keep smoking out of youth-rated movies!
Eighty percent of U.S. movies released in the past five years have included smoking. The World Health Organization and U.S. health authorities agree that exposure to smoking in movies influences adolescents powerfully. Recent large-scale research studies indicate that this exposure recruits more than half of all new young smokers in the United States � 390,000 adolescents annually � of whom about one-third will eventually die from tobacco-related disease.
On a global scale, Hollywood's contribution to tobacco addiction threatens a death toll surpassing other major causes combined. Tobacco is the #2 killer worldwide. Both the U.S. film industry and the U.S. tobacco industry are aggressively expanding into the emerging markets of Asia, Africa, Latin America and Eastern Europe. Global tobacco deaths, now five million each year, will double in two decades, with most of the disability and mortality in poorer nations. Between now and 2050, total deaths from tobacco-related cancer and from cardiovascular and lung diseases will reach 450 million.
The U.S. film industry has a documented history of taking money to display tobacco products and smoking. Paid tobacco product placement is now prohibited by legal agreement between the major tobacco companies and top law enforcement officials, yet highly-advertised U.S. cigarette brands still appear in movies worldwide; smoking in U.S. films has returned to the level of 1950; and the balance of smoking incidents continues to shift from R-rated (over 17) to PG-13 (youth-rated) motion pictures.
A reasonable solution, respecting freedom of expression, is available. Updating its own rating system, administered by the Motion Picture Association of America, the U.S. film industry could easily keep smoking out of future movies marketed to adolescents, cutting their exposure � and consequent injury � by at least half. Violence, strong language and sexual content are already voluntarily calibrated to achieve a coveted PG-13 rating. The toxic effect of smoking on screen should be treated at least as seriously as offensive language.
The U.S. film industry knows that smoking on screen kills in real life. It is incumbent upon the studios and the media conglomerates that own them to take meaningful action as swiftly as possible. I join young people, parents, community leaders and health professionals around the world petitioning Motion Picture Association of America members to adopt a smokefree policy for youth-rated films. The largest generation of young people in world history deserves no less.
Note: This Keep smoking out of youth-rated movies! petition was submitted by Smokefree Movies Action Network. ThePetitionSite.com is a free service provided to help concerned citizens rally support for issues they believe in. The opinions expressed by this petition do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of ThePetitionSite.com or Care2.com. There is no express or implied endorsement of this petition nor any newsletter offers (except those from Care2.com) by Care2.com, Inc, ThePetitionSite.com, or our sponsors. If you believe this system is being abused, please contact customer support.
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